Friday, April 6, 2012

They Fight Crime



Inspired by the trope They Fight Crime


Two very different characters are obliged to work together to solve a crime. The premise is very often, but not always, expressed in trailers and pitches as "He's an X. She's a Y. Together, they fight crime!" So much that it's almost become a Stock Phrase. Expect lots of cultural clash humor arising both from different policing traditions and from general personal differences between the two characters. Sometimes the ante will be raised by making the crime-fighters from two groups that are actively antagonistic.


Can be the premise of a Buddy Cop Show, although then there usually needs to be some reason for the other cop to continue hanging around beyond the pilot.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Don't Go In the Woods


Inspired by the Trope Don't Go In The Woods

Two or more people, often a group of teenagers, go for a casual hike or a vacation at a secluded retreat in the deciduous wilderness of North America or Europe. Horrible things ensue. The soon-to-be-not-so-happy campers get stalked through the trees by psychopathic killers; they run afoul of tribes of inbred hillbillies; ghosts, werewolves, witches, druids, fairies and other such beings toy with them; perhaps even the trees themselves attack them; they hear strange noises in the night; people disappear; people go insane.
Rarely do movies of this flavor end happily; often with everyone ending up dead, though there may be a Final Girl. This has almost gotten to the point at which such movies almost have Foregone Conclusions.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Prehensile Hair


Inspired by the trope Prehensile Hair 


Sometimes people have a hairdo so big it seems like it has a mind of its own, and moves on its own accord. And then there are the people who have the ability to make it move. Characters with superpowers that allow their mullets to become murderous. To allow their ponytails to pummel. To allow their pigtails to pick fights. To allow their braids to barrage.


I had no idea what trope to do for week 4, so my lovely friend Anila  suggested this one...challenge accepted. 


Just...Barely...Made it!  Yay for midterms week!  This was one of those weeks where I had to put everything in a list of priorities in order to keep myself from stressing out, but all worked out in the end.  Organization truly is the key to sanity sometimes. 

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Angels Pose




Inspired by the trope Angels Pose


When a team, generally young women, pose in a distinctive style in the midst of battle. It looks pretty good on camera and it conveys teamwork. The general appearance is usually dependent on a symmetrical three person shape, the two on the outside have their body positions turned away from the center person. A silhouette is optional. But there is also a two person variation of them standing back to back. Often done in a montage.


Steampunk just 'cause. 


Finished with this one with less then an hour until I run out of time for this week!  Homework's keeping me busy this trimester, but so far I'm loving all of my classes!  Finally I'm back in a drawing class and it is so wonderful.  From 6 to 9 at night (and honestly I stay there after for at least an extra hour working ) I go to the studio, and my classmates and I work on honing our skills, drink tea and coffee, and enjoy what is somehow simultaneously one of the most relaxing and the most stressful classes. 



Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Great Big Book of Everything


Inspired by the trope Great Big Book of Everything:

The Great Big Book of Everything: The one-stop shop for all your plot needs. Need information about thesuper-power you've just been given? On the first page. Want to find the only way to kill the Big Bad? It has a detailed entry.
Whoever wrote this book must have damn-near infinite knowledge. It has all the facts you need and has them at the moment you need them! In fact, it seems like new information just appears in the book all the time, as the plot requires.

Friday, December 30, 2011

Hollywood Darkness


Inspired by the trope Hollywood Darkness:


Hollwood Darkness...the trope that when a character switches off the last light in the room, a vaguely bluish light, only slightly dimmer than normal illumination, switches on. It's implied that the characters aren't supposed to see what the audience can, which makes sense; a black screen isn't much fun to watch.


New tablet!!!

Sunday, November 27, 2011

How To Train Your Dragon – Because Friendship is More Important than Anything


Warning:  The following post contains the following:
1. Complete and utter fangirling
2. A crapload of gifs
3. Art geekery
4. Incoherent spewing of adoration (that may contain spoilers if you haven’t seen the movie.)
4.5.  If you haven’t seen the movie – GO SEE IT NOW!!!!!!!!  No choice!

Once more, this is why I listen to my friends…because they put me in touch with things that I usually don’t see or am not all excited to see.  When the movie How to Train Your Dragon (hereafter to be referred to as HTTYD for brevity’s sake) first started televised advertisments, I saw it and thought “meh, looks sort of stupid.”  But then one day my friends Kayla and Anila and some of the others in our group were going to see it after school…and I wanted to hang out and figured it was a movie, so why not? 

My thoughts during and after the movie were something like this: Wow. Wow, wow, wow, wow, wow, HOW COULD I HAVE EVER THOUGHT THIS MOVIE LOOKED STUPID!!!

We saw it in 3-D, and to this day, I maintain that the only time it is worth chucking an extra five dollars at the ticket window for 3-D is if there are awesome flying scenes…in other words, a movie like this one.  The flying sequences are amazingly animated (well, everything is amazingly animated, but especially those) and I just sat there with my friends, with this movie streaming from the screen, and infecting our brains with thoughts of adorableness.


So, why do I love HTTYD so much?  God, where do I start?!  Let’s start with the obvious: Toothless.  Now I’m sure that everyone that’s seen this movie and loved it has the same reaction “Toothless is just like my cat/dog ____ !”  For me, Toothless is my dog Elsa.  Now, Anila and I have several times talked about whether Toothless is more like a dog or a cat, and I agree that he’s much more like a cat…that being said, my dog doesn’t think that she’s a dog at all… If, after this movie, you don’t want a friend that’s as loyal as Toothless, then there’s something seriously wrong with you.

The bond of friendship that grows between Toothless and Hiccup as the story progresses is absolutely beautiful, and that very one shot when Hiccup has been knocked unconscious and is falling toward the billowing flames from the Green Death (the giant dragon that the duo have to fight to save their tribe of vikings who stupidly decided to storm the dragon’s nest…) and Toothless is diving to save him…well, words can’t describe how beautiful that split second is. 




This story isn’t just about a boy and his dragon, it’s about two outcasts that help each other attain that which they want most dearly – at first for Hiccup it’s to be accepted among his peers, and for Toothless it’s to feel the joy of flight again – but really what they needed the most was each other.  And in the end their story was beautifully mirrored, both broken, both holding the other up.

In a way, there’s almost a gay undertone to this movie.  Not in that I think Hiccup/Toothless is an item (but believe me, a lot of people on DeviantArt think so...again, rule 34) but in that the story is about a young boy who isn’t accepted by the rest of his tribe, it certainly has parallels to the acceptance that a lot of young people that are realizing their sexuality want.  A repeating conversation in this movie is:
Stoic: “You just need to stop being…this”
Hiccup: “You just gestured to all of me.”

But in the end the conversation changed to:
Stoic: “Turns out all we needed was a little…this”
Hiccup: “You just gestured to all of me.”
He goes from being the thing that everyone wants to change so much to the person that others both accept and treasure. 

From an art perspective, there is so much to love about this movie.  (Prepare for serious art nerdiness here…)  Whenever I see HTTYD, I am just blown away by the detail of the animation in every single thing.  Whether it’s from the minute scales on Toothless’ head to the tiny scar that is on Hiccup’s chin, the detail is there.  I mean, look at the picture below…do you see the reflection in Toothless’ eye?  Now look closer, what do you see?  Yes, those reflections are of the trees behind Hiccup.  Ladies and Gentlemen THIS is how to do proper animation!!!


Another thing that really sets HTTYD apart from other animated movies is how the movie is lit.  It doesn’t have whole sets completely lit from top to toe showing the entire thing, there are times where the sets are allowed to just fade into darkness when the scene calls for it, especially since the main source of light in scenes that were set indoors were candles.  The art director in charge of HTTYD actually brought in a cinematographer to help with this…and it shows.  The world that the story of HTTYD takes place in is so vibrant, and the lighting really brings this across. Another place that this is evident is in the cove area that Toothless first crashed in which later became more or less his home.  I remember being very impacted visually by the rays of light that shown, almost magically, through the foliage.


Even the concept art for this movie is above exceptional.  Now, as someone that’s interested in possibly perusing a career in illustration and/or concept art, I’m always checking out the art that went into films.  I have so many “art of” books in my room I can’t remember all of them from the top of my head.  I say that so that when I say that the concept art that the world of HTTYD sprung from is particularly fantastic, it means more then just “oooh, pretty picture!”  Oftentimes concept art will have a certain unfinished feel to it – not the case here.  The concept art below could have been used as the cover of a book!


Speaking of art, there is some seriously amazing fanart related to HTTYD!  I think that it really says something about the quality of the movie itself that it has such a large amount of more mature artists doing fanart dedicated to it. 


Have I mentioned that I absolutely LOVE the music!  John Powell has delivered a soundtrack that is mysterious and enchanting, that soars above the clouds, and pounds as frantically as a fearful heart when the story calls for it.  Do I listen to it to calm down after a long day?  Yes. Do I listen to it to get ready for a test?  Yes. Do I – just yes, I listen to this soundtrack All. The. Time.  The song “Coming Back Around” is my power-up song.  When driving alone, I will turn up the volume and just feel the music as it crescendos and goes into the drum section.  


HTTYD is also a bonding point between my friends and I.  We are all mutually in love with this movie, and when it came out on DVD, we had a sleepover and watched it twice in a row (once normally, once with the commentary).  We would probably have watched it more, but honestly we were all just far too tired for that.  Even now, with all of us scattered at different colleges, it’s stayed a bonding point…and we’ve already decided that we’re going to be having a HTTYD party/sleepover again once we all arrive back home this Christmas.

Every time I watch it, I get something new.  Every time I watch it, it fills me with happiness.  Every time I watch it, I geek out.